Skip to main content
Innovation in Aging logoLink to Innovation in Aging
. 2021 Dec 17;5(Suppl 1):422. doi: 10.1093/geroni/igab046.1636

Exploring Life Instability’s Relationship to the Mental Health of Older Adults With HIV

Elliott Weinstein 1, Audrey Harkness 2, Gail Ironson 3, Cho-Hee Shrader 2, Dustin Duncan 4, Steven Safren 3
PMCID: PMC8970028

Abstract

The study is one of the first to examine both the prevalence of life instability among older adults with HIV (OAWH) in a community clinic and its relationship to their mental health. OAWH (N=623) from a community medical clinic completed an interviewer-administered assessment (English/Spanish) which included an additive Life Instability Index (LII) composed of indicators at the individual (e.g. education, housing instability, employment status) and community (e.g. poverty, transportation) levels. Participants were a mean age of 60 years (SD = 5.90) with the majority identifying as Black-non-Hispanic (65.9%), cisgender male (60.8%), and heterosexual (80.6%). Participants reported an average of 6.08 destabilizing factors (SD = 1.44). In multiple linear regression analyses LII was significantly related to increased substance use among participants (b= 0.08, p < 0.01), but not with anxiety or depression. An LII is an innovative approach to assess the relationship between OAWH’s mental health and social determinants of health.


Articles from Innovation in Aging are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

RESOURCES